posted on 2024-07-13, 02:44authored byDiane Robbie, Debbi Weaver
While there is definitely a place for centrally delivered Professional Development (PD), staff often don't transfer what they have learned in the PD sessions and return to their workspace usually continuing as before. This paper describes an evidence- and scholarship-based model of PD, where academic developers work closely with teaching staff on projects designed to address teaching needs specifically through the implementation of educational technologies. Each project involves engagement with the relevant scholarly literature, implementation of an appropriate teaching strategy or innovation, evaluation of the effectiveness of that implementation, and ultimately publication of the outcomes of the project. Fostering a one-to-one collaborative, mentoring relationship means the academic developer also benefits by extending their scholarly knowledge, and contributes to the discipline of academic development.
Same places, different spaces, the 26th Australasian Society for Computers in Learning in Tertiary Education Conference (ASCILITE 2009), Auckland, New Zealand, 06-09 December 2009 / R. J. Atkinson and C. McBeath (eds)
Conference name
Same places, different spaces, the 26th Australasian Society for Computers in Learning in Tertiary Education Conference ASCILITE 2009, Auckland, New Zealand, 06-09 December 2009 / R. J. Atkinson and C. McBeath eds
Pagination
8 pp
Publisher
University of Auckland, Auckland University of Technology, and Australasian Society for Computers in Learning in Tertiary Education